Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

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FIELD RESEARCH AND FOCUS GROUP RESEARCH

The quantity of notes varies across types. For
example, 6 hours in the field might result in one
page of jotted notes, forty pages of direct observa-
tion, five pages of researcher inference, and two
pages total for methodological, theoretical, and
personal notes.

1.Jotted notes.It is nearly impossible to take
good notes in the field. Even a known observer in a
public setting looks strange when furiously writing.
More important, when looking down and writing, you
cannot see and hear what is happening. The atten-
tion given to note writing is taken from field observa-
tion where it belongs. The specific setting determines
whether you can take notes in the field. You may be
able to write, and members may expect it, or you
may have to be secretive (e.g., go to the restroom).
As McDermott (2006:88) noted after an important
interaction in her field site, “I hastily improvised a
trip to the restroom to scribble furiously... .”
You write jotted noteswhile in the field. They
are very short memory triggers such as words,
phrases, or drawings you make inconspicuously,
perhaps scribbling on a convenient item (e.g., nap-
kin, matchbook). Later you will incorporate them
into your direct observation notes, but never sub-
stitute them for the direct observation notes.
2.Direct observation notes.The basic source
of field data are direct observation notes.You


write them immediately after leaving the field,
which you can add to later. You want to order the
notes chronologically with the date, time, and place
written on each entry. They serve as a detailed
description of what you heard and saw in very con-
crete, specific terms. To the extent possible, they
are an exact recording of the particular words,
phrases, or actions.
Your memory improves with practice, and you
will soon remember exact phrases from the field.
Verbatim statements should be written with double
quote marks to distinguish them from paraphrases.
Dialogue accessories (nonverbal communication,
props, tone, speed, volume, gestures) should be
recorded as well. Record what was actually said and
do not clean it up; include ungrammatical speech,
slang, and misstatements (e.g., write, “Uh, I’m goin’
home, Sal,” not “I am going home, Sally”).
Put concrete details, not summaries, in notes.
For example, instead of “We talked about sports,”

FIGURE 4 Types of Field Notes

Sunday, October 4. Kay’s
Kafe 3:00 pm. Large
White male in mid-40s,
overweight, enters. He
wears worn brown suit.
He is alone; sits at booth
#2. Kay comes by, asks,
“What’ll it be?” Man says,
“Coffee, black for now.”
She leaves and he lights
cigarette and reads
menu. 3:15 pm. Kay turns
on radio.

Direct Observation

Kay seems
friendly today,
humming. She
becomes solemn
and watchful. I
think she puts on
the radio when
nervous.

Inference

Women are
afraid of men
who come in
alone since the
robbery.

Analytic

It is raining.
I am feeling
comfortable
with Kay but
am bored today.

Personal Journal

Direct observation notes Field research notes that
attempt to include all details and specifics of what the
researcher heard or saw in a field site and that are writ-
ten to permit multiple interpretations later.

Jotted notes Field notes inconspicuously written
while in the field site on whatever is convenient in
order to “jog the memory” later.
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